Forget Advisor Group. It's now Osaic

Forget Advisor Group. It's now Osaic
While the giant network of 11,000 brokers and advisors has announced its new name, the process of rolling its eight firms into one will take up to two years.
JUN 21, 2023

It survived the worst of the credit crisis as AIG Advisor Group. When it was spun off from American International Group Inc. in 2016 to a private equity group, Lightyear Capital, it became just Advisor Group.

Currently under the control of another private equity group, Reverence Capital, the giant network of 11,000 brokers and financial advisors, with $500 billion in client assets and eight distinct firms, is now operating under one brand and service platform: Osaic.

That process of rolling eight firms into one will take up to two years. In April, InvestmentNews was first to report Advisor Group's intention to rebrand and consolidate its broker-dealers.

The company announced its new name on a live-streamed web event Wednesday.

“We developed the Osaic brand as a reflection of who we are and most importantly who we want to be, and as a promise for the advisors we serve and will serve in the future," CEO Jamie Price said during the web announcement. "A brand is just not just one thing, it’s actually everything. And this brand represents our commitment to all the financial professionals we work with today, and will work with in the future."

"As we went through the brand and naming process, we decided early on to go with a brand that could be uniquely ours, a name that wasn’t a recognized word or combination of words because we wanted something that again was ours," Price said. "This brand pulls together our heritage, our history, our scale, our multiple capabilities and diversity of thought and background into one beautiful picture. It’s the perfect confluence of everything we are today and who we want to be in the future."

Osaic, the former Advisor Group, is a sprawling network of broker-dealers that will be consolidating, at times a difficult process for financial advisors and back-office workers. The process of rolling eight firms into one will take up to two years.

Starting this fall, each of the wealth management firms previously under Advisor Group will transition into Osaic, the company said in its announcement. The firm is shooting for a smooth transition of advisors' businesses, without the need for repapering accounts.

The other six firms are: FSC Securities Corp., Royal Alliance Associates Inc., SagePoint Financial Inc., Securities America Inc., Triad Advisors and Woodbury Financial Services Inc.

The firm has large operational hubs in Omaha, Nebraska, the home of Securities America, and Phoenix, where SagePoint is based.

Here's what wealth advisors need to know before going solo

Latest News

Investing for accountability: How to frame a values-driven conversation with clients
Investing for accountability: How to frame a values-driven conversation with clients

By listening for what truly matters and where clients want to make a difference, advisors can avoid politics and help build more personal strategies.

Advisor moves: Raymond James ends week with $1B Commonwealth recruitment streak
Advisor moves: Raymond James ends week with $1B Commonwealth recruitment streak

JPMorgan and RBC have also welcomed ex-UBS advisors in Texas, while Steward Partners and SpirePoint make new additions in the Sun Belt.

Cook Lawyer says fraud claims are Trump’s ‘weapon of choice’
Cook Lawyer says fraud claims are Trump’s ‘weapon of choice’

Counsel representing Lisa Cook argued the president's pattern of publicly blasting the Fed calls the foundation for her firing into question.

SEC orders Vanguard, Empower to pay more than $25M over failures linked to advisor compensation
SEC orders Vanguard, Empower to pay more than $25M over failures linked to advisor compensation

The two firms violated the Advisers Act and Reg BI by making misleading statements and failing to disclose conflicts to retail and retirement plan investors, according to the regulator.

RIA moves: Wells Fargo pair joins &Partners in Virginia
RIA moves: Wells Fargo pair joins &Partners in Virginia

Elsewhere, two breakaway teams from Morgan Stanley and Merrill unite to form a $2 billion RIA, while a Texas-based independent merges with a Bay Area advisory practice.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.